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  1. Profile: Joan Marie Johnson (born January 1945, New Orleans, Louisiana, USA - died 3 October, 2016, New Orleans, Louisiana, USA, aged 72) was an American singer. Together with her cousins Barbara Anne Hawkins and Rosa Lee Hawkins founded The Dixie Cups in 1963. The group is still performing although Joan Marie Johnson left the group many years ...

  2. Joan Marie Johnson is a lecturer in history at Northeastern Illinois University in Chicago and the cofounder and codirector of the Newberry Seminar on Women and Gender. She has also served as a visiting assistant professor of history at Miami University in Oxford, Ohio, and at the University of Cincinnati, and as a scholar-in-residence at the ...

  3. Joan Marie Johnson examines an understudied dimension of women’s history in the United States: how a group of affluent white women from the late nineteenth through the mid-twentieth centuries advanced the status of all women through acts of philanthropy. This cadre of activists included Phoebe Hearst, the mother of William Randolph Hearst ...

  4. Joan Marie Johnson: Most of the wealthy women in the book inherited their fortunes, from their fathers or from their husbands. What makes their giving to the women’s movement so fascinating is that despite their enormous privilege, and these were very wealthy white women, they still experienced discrimination as women.

  5. JOAN MARIE JOHNSON, PhD, is a historian and author of many articles and books on women and philanthropy, race, reform, and education. Her recent books are The Woman ...

  6. Joan Johnson relocated to Texas. Two years later in April 2007, The Louisiana Music Hall Of Fame honored The Dixie Cups for their contributions to Louisiana music by inducting them into The Louisiana Music Hall of Fame. Joan Marie Johnson died in New Orleans of congestive heart failure on October 3, 2016 at the age of 72. Discography. Singles

  7. 11 de oct. de 2016 · Joan Marie Johnson, one of the founding members of the New Orleans girl group the Dixie Cups, which had a No. 1 hit in 1964 with "Chapel of Love," died Oct. 3 at a hospice center in New Orleans ...